December
11, 2006 "The cross calls us not to glorify, but to attend
to the suffering in the world and to struggle for its elimination," said the participants
of a theological consultation on cruelty organized by the Faith and Order Commission
of the World Council of Churches (WCC) in partnership with the Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America (ELCA). The conference took place 5-8 December in Puidoux, Switzerland.
Sex trafficking of women and children, walls going up
in the name of security, new justifications for the torture of human beings –
these and other forms of cruelty were some of the issues tackled by 25 theologians
and social scientists who attended the conference. In
reflecting on such structural and institutional forms of cruelty as patriarchy,
racism, casteism, and xenophobia, participants noted that as well as being inherently
cruel in and of themselves, such structures and institutions also legitimize and
perpetrate cruelty against the vulnerable and the disempowered. "For
over two thousand years we have talked about cruelty. It is an ugliness that implicates
us and tears the fabric of our societies," said Dr Michael Trice of the ELCA,
whose theological study provided the theoretical framework of the consultation.
"We have gathered here," Trice noted, "in order to learn what churches can do
to respond to inter-generational cruelty that is created and perpetrated at institutional
and structural levels." "Given the role of slavery and
its allied ideology of race-thinking in laying the foundations of current-day
racism, shouldn't the church go beyond merely apologizing for its role in making
slavery palatable?" asked Dr Lerleen Willis of the Sheffield Black Theology Forum,
UK in a presentation on "Hierarchies of humanity: the dehumanizing potential of
racism in Europe." "This is an attempt to do theology
from below, on the basis of the experiences of people living in contexts and situations
of acute violence. Such a theology has the potential to inspire churches to champion
life in a world overwhelmed by a culture of death," said Dr Deenabandhu Manchala
of the WCC. The cross, participants affirmed, "goes before
us as a pledge that God is leading us to that time when God will wipe away every
tear and there will be no suffering or mourning or death anymore. It reminds us
of, and to live in, the confidence that God is already overcoming that suffering
in our world." A list of the presenters and their papers
is available at: http://wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/faith/cruelty-presenterslist.html.
See WCC Faith & Order study on "Nurturing peace, overcoming
violence: In the way of Christ for the sake of the world": http://wcc-coe.org/wcc/what/faith/nurturingpeace.html.
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